Aevia

Carotid Ultrasound

A safe, non-invasive scan of the main arteries in your neck that supply blood to your brain. It screens for plaque buildup, arterial thickening, and stroke risk.

Key facts at a glance

Why vascular health matters.

Stroke Link
Narrowing or clots from the carotid arteries account for roughly 1 in 5 ischemic strokes.
~20%
Safety
Uses sound waves (ultrasound) only. No radiation, no needles, and no pain.
100% Safe
Early Warning
Carotid Intima-Media Thickness (CIMT) can reveal arterial aging before significant plaque even forms.
CIMT
Procedure Time
A quick outpatient procedure performed by a sonographer.
~15-30 min

Who this is for

  • Individuals with high cholesterol (high LDL or ApoB).
  • Those with high blood pressure or a family history of stroke.
  • People interested in a "functional age" of their arteries via CIMT measurement.

What it detects

  • Stenosis: Narrowing of the artery that restricts blood flow.
  • Plaque Composition: Distinguishes between stable (calcified) and potentially unstable (soft) plaque.
  • Arterial Wall Thickness: Early thickening (CIMT) suggests systemic atherosclerosis.

How it Works

  • A sonographer applies gel to your neck and uses a handheld probe (transducer).
  • Sound waves bounce off blood cells and arterial walls to create images.
  • Doppler ultrasound also lets them hear and measure the speed of blood flow, which speeds up through narrow spots.

Interpreting Results

  • Normal: Smooth arterial walls, no plaque, normal flow speeds.
  • Increased CIMT: Arterial walls are thicker than expected for your age; indicates early vascular aging and need for aggressive risk factor control.
  • Plaque Present: Distinct deposits found. If they don't block flow significantly (< 50%), medical management (statins, lifestyle) is usually key.
  • Significant Stenosis (>50-70%): Severe narrowing. May require referral to a vascular specialist.

Limitations

  • Operator Dependent: The quality of the scan depends on the skill of the sonographer.
  • Scope: Only visualizes the neck arteries, not the arteries inside the skull (intracranial) or the heart itself (coronaries).

References

Clinical guidelines and studies.

  1. ASE Consensus Statement: Carotid Intima-Media ThicknessJournal of the American Society of Echocardiography (2008)
  2. Gupta A, et al.. Carotid Plaque and Risk of Ischemic StrokeStroke (2013)
  3. Screening for Asymptomatic Carotid Artery StenosisUSPSTF Recommendation Statement (2021)
    View sourceDiscusses population-wide screening vs. targeted high-risk assessment

Content is educational and not medical advice. For personal recommendations, consult your clinician.

Carotid Ultrasound: Screening for Stroke Risk